
The Roman 'Brexit': how life in Britain changed after 409AD
Oct 16, 2018 14:58 pm UTC| Insights & Views
Leaving a major political body is nothing new for mainland Britain. In 409AD, more than 350 years after the Roman conquest of 43AD, the island slipped from the control of the Roman Empire. Much like the present Brexit, the...
View from The Hill: Conservatives may come to regret stirring hornets' nest of religious freedom
Oct 16, 2018 14:57 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
When Scott Morrison promised to abolish the right of religious schools to expel gay students because of their sexual orientation, his motive was obvious and so was what would inevitably happen next. Morrison insults...
General Pinochet arrest: 20 years on, here's how it changed global justice
Oct 16, 2018 14:57 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
It became an address to remember: 20 Devonshire Place, Marylebone. For it was here, behind the front door of The London Clinic, that former Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet was arrested on the night of October 16,...
Sulawesi tsunami: how social media (and a lullaby) can save lives in future disasters
Oct 16, 2018 14:56 pm UTC| Insights & Views Nature
Social media use is widespread in Indonesia, so people filming everyday scenes can sometimes inadvertently capture extraordinary environmental events. Of the viral videos to emerge of the recent earthquake and tsunami in...

Oct 16, 2018 14:56 pm UTC| Insights & Views Economy
London has grown steadily for the past 30 years, in people, jobs and self confidence. Population growth has been driven both by in-migration (more people moving to London than moving away) and by natural change (more...
Billingulism: how to get your child to speak your language – and why it matters
Oct 16, 2018 14:56 pm UTC| Insights & Views Life
Humans have been migrating since prehistoric times moving within and beyond geographical borders in search of food, for survival or for better prospects in life. In the European Union alone, the latest figures show that...

NASA wants to send humans to Venus – here's why that's a brilliant idea
Oct 16, 2018 14:55 pm UTC| Insights & Views Science
Popular science fiction of the early 20th century depicted Venus as some kind of wonderland of pleasantly warm temperatures, forests, swamps and even dinosaurs. In 1950, the Hayden Planetarium at the American Natural...